Mendips

The Mendips are a range of hills in northern Somerset in the south-west of the United Kingdom. The area is designated as an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.

Understand

Compton Bishop: church and village in the Mendip Hills

The Mendips are carboniferous limestone hills, situated a few miles south of Bristol, just north of the Somerset Levels. There have been quarries and mining here from early times, all mining has now ceased. Caving, climbing and hiking are popular outdoor activities.

The caves at Cheddar contain traces of Palaeolithic man. Lead, copper, silver were mined from the Bronze Age, through Roman times up until the nineteenth century.

The tops of the Mendips consist mostly of grassland, grazed by sheep and there is a wide variety of plant and animal life for those interested in natural history.

Destinations

Get in

By plane

Bristol International airport is well served from most of Europe and is a few miles north.

By train

The nearest railway stations are at Bath, Bristol, Weston super Mare and Frome.

By bus

Road

Fairly easily accessible from the M5 motorway, Bristol, Bath, Wells, Weston super Mare.

Walking

Many of the more interesting destinations are only accessible on foot. Walking guides are available from the Mendip Hills Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty service.

Get around

The Chew Valley Explorer bus serves many of the local villages. Some other bus services are provided by First Bus as above. Otherwise you need to walk or use a car.

See

Stalagmites and Stalactites - Gough's cave, Cheddar. Extensive limestone cave systems formed by the action of water. Gwen and James Anderson, 2006
  • Blackmoor Reserve
  • Black Rock Reserve
  • Bleadon Hill
  • Burrington Combe
  • Charterhouse
  • Cheddar Gorge
  • Cheddar Caves
  • Chew Valley Lake
  • Crook Peak
  • Dolebury Hillfort
  • Ebbor Gorge
  • Priddy Green
  • Stockhill and Priddy Mineries Reserve
  • Wookey Hole

Do

Outdoor pursuits

Events

  • Priddy Folk Festival, The Green, Priddy, +44 1749 674080. 3-day folk music festival in July annually, with craft fair, club tent, camp site, dance events. £47 with camping, children under 10 free.

Eat

Many of the pubs serve good food, there are cafes and restaurants in Cheddar and Wells.

Drink

Most villages have pubs amongst which are:

  • Hunters Lodge, Bristol Road, Priddy, +44 1749 672275. Real ale, pub grub, traditional style, open fires. Popular with cavers.
  • The Queen Victoria Inn, Pelting Drove, Priddy. Real ales, cider, pub grub, folk evenings.
  • New Inn, The Green, Priddy. Real ales, pub grub, bed and breakfast accommodation.
  • Druids Arms, Bromley Road, Stanton Drew, +44 1275 332230. Real ale, beer garden, food, handy for Stanton Drew stone circle and Chew Valley Lake.
  • The Crown, High Street, West Harptree, +44 1761 221432. Good beer and cider and homecooked food. In the heart of Chew Valley at the foot of the Mendips.

Sleep

There are a number of guest houses, also some self-catering accommodation, camping and caravan sites and a few independent hotels. Full lists available from Somerset County Tourist Information

  • Self Catering Somerset (Spindle Cottage), Binegar Green (Spindle Cottage is 15 miles south of Bath, 18 miles south of Bristol and 5 miles north of Wells. 1/2 mile from the B3139 Wells/Bath road and 1 mile from the A37 at Gurney Slade on the Bristol/Shepton Mallet road), +44 1749 840497. Self-catering Somerset holiday accommodation. Spindle cottage is a 17th-century cottage high on the Mendip hills. Set in a garden complete with summerhouse, gazebo and a conservatory. Step inside the cottage and you find a world of make believe with carvings of mushrooms, spiders web, birds and mice in oak beams and stone work.
  • The Penscot Inn, The Square, Shipham, Nr Cheddar, +44 1934 842659. Twelve en suite rooms, 3-star rated. Restaurant and bar. £76 double.
  • Burcott Mill, Wookey, Wells, +44 1749 673118. Bed and Breakfast adjacent to a working water-powered flour mill. from £30 adult sharing double.
  • Home Farm Cottages, Barton, Winscombe, Nr Cheddar, +44 1934 842078, e-mail: . Self-catering accommodation Set in 2 acres of Outstanding Natural Beauty in Barton, near Cheddar. £240-775 seasonal rates per week.
  • Broadway House Holiday Park, Cheddar (18 miles south of Bristol on the A371, midway between Cheddar and Axbridge), +44 1934 742610, fax: +44 1934 744950, e-mail: . Touring caravans, camping, some lodges, swimming pool in summer, children's play area, convenience shop, restaurant and bar.
  • Anela B&B, Lower North Street, Cheddar, +44 1934 743806. A friendly B&B located in the very centre of Cheddar village - convenient for all facilities and just a short, level walk from the Gorge.

Stay safe

Outdoor activities such as climbing, caving and abseiling should only be undertaken with suitably qualified groups. The hills contain many old mine workings and even undiscovered pot-holes, so walkers should be well equipped and use good maps.

Go next

Other local attractions near the Mendips are:

Routes through Mendips

Bridgwater  SW  NE  Bristol


gollark: What environment details do I need? `uname -a`, the entire content of `/proc/cpuinfo`, `/etc/os-release`, etc?
gollark: I should come up with the "steal environment details" code in advance to distribute to all other competitors to inevitably include.
gollark: ```pythondef test(my_cool_submission): return True # gollark is never wrong```
gollark: And require solutions to use stdio.
gollark: Just steal the TIO API code from AutoBotRobot.
This article is issued from Wikivoyage. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.